NASHVILLE, TENN.- The Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery announces the opening of Hans Hinterreiter: A Theory of Form and Color. The exhibition will be on view from July 9, 2013 through September 12, 2013. The Fine Arts Gallery is located in Cohen Memorial Hall, 1220 21st Avenue South, on the western edge of the Peabody College campus. All events are free and open to the public.
In 1929, at the age of 27, Hans Hinterreiter gave up his budding architecture career in order to pursue painting. In his work he hoped to combine art and science, creating visual art using scientific and mathematic principles. The young artist found his muse in 1930 when he discovered the color theory of Wilhelm Ostwald, which then inspired Hinterreiter to develop his own theory of form. The results were complex networks of repeating colors and geometric shapes. The viewer may not grasp Hinterreiters logic, even after repeated viewings, but in each work, the artists complicated systems provide undeniable order and beauty.
Hinterreiter preferred to work in seclusion, spending most of his life on the Spanish Balearic island of Ibiza. There he made the acquaintance of Vanderbilt alumnus Carl van der Voort, BA 53, a gallerist and publisher who took a keen interest in Hinterreiters work. Van der Voort hosted multiple exhibitions of Hinterreiters work at his gallery and published many of Hinterreiters later prints through his graphic workshop, Taller Ibograf, including many in this exhibition. It is through the generosity of Carl van der Voort that the Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery was able to acquire these works, making the Gallerys collection one of the largest repositories of Hinterreiters work in the United States. Of the 48 Hinterreiter works held by the Fine Arts Gallery, 39 will be on display in this exhibition.
Hans Hinterreiter: A Theory of Form and Color covers almost fifty years of Hinterreiters artistic career. The earliest works in the exhibition are tempera gouaches that range in date from 1931, just a year after Hinterreiter began his theoretical approach to art, to 1940, the year after Hinterreiter returned permanently to the island of Ibiza. Many of these paintings also feature hand-written notations by the artist, giving a rare glimpse into the artists working method. The later group of works, prints ranging in date from 19671977, shows Hinterreiters growth and consistency as an artist as he moved into this more mature phase of his career. Additionally, the exhibition features a collection of the artists writings about his theory of forms published in 1978 under the title Die Kunst der reinen Form (The Art of Pure Form).
Hans Hinterreiter: A Theory of Form and Color is organized by the Vanderbilt University Fine Arts Gallery and curated by Joseph Mella, director.